One of the proposed roles of the GroEL-GroES cavity
is to provide an “infinite dilution” folding
chamber where protein substrate can fold avoiding deleterious
off-pathway aggregation. Support for this hypothesis has
been strengthened by a number of studies that demonstrated
a mandatory GroES requirement under nonpermissive solution
conditions, i.e., the conditions where proteins cannot
spontaneously fold. We have found that the refolding of
glutamine synthetase (GS) does not follow this pattern.
In the presence of natural osmolytes trimethylamine N-oxide
(TMAO) or potassium glutamate, refolding GS monomers readily
aggregate into very large inactive complexes and fail to
reactivate even at low protein concentration. Surprisingly,
under these “nonpermissive” folding conditions,
GS can reactivate with GroEL and ATP alone and does not
require the encapsulation by GroES. In contrast, the chaperonin
dependent reactivation of GS under another nonpermissive
condition of low Mg2+ (<2 mM MgCl2)
shows an absolute requirement of GroES. High-performance
liquid chromatography gel filtration analysis and irreversible
misfolding kinetics show that a major species of the GS
folding intermediates, generated under these “low
Mg2+” conditions exist as long-lived metastable
monomers that can be reactivated after a significantly
delayed addition of the GroEL. Our results indicate that
the GroES requirement for refolding of GS is not simply
dictated by the aggregation propensity of this protein
substrate. Our data also suggest that the GroEL-GroES encapsulated
environment is not required under all nonpermissive folding
conditions.